It looked odd, for the barrier, whatever it was, was completely invisible. It felt odder going through, a tingling of the skin that extended into Nish's ears and up his nose, only to disappear once he was through, though the soles of his feet itched for a long time afterwards. Inside looked exactly the same as outside. The sun was just as bright. He could hear birds calling, and the gentle tick of the rotor, and the same breeze ruffled his hair. Yet it was totally different. Nish felt enclosed. And also, that he was in a sacred place.
Yggur strode past, not awed at all, heading for a pair of constructs, seemingly undamaged, some way further in. 'Come on. Those scavengers might come to investigate and I don't want to be trapped in here.'
There were no bodies inside either machine. Yggur wasted no time. 'Nish, pull the base of this one apart and see if you can get the driving mechanism out in one piece. Irisis, we'll work in the cabin, to discover whatever we can about how it's controlled. We'll have to be quick.'
The metal was cold but Nish had experienced far worse. And having spent so much time with Minis and the Aachim, he was quite familiar with constructs, even if he'd never taken one apart by himself.
By the time the sun was halfway up the sky, he had removed the base plate and was struggling with the mechanism inside, a complicated structure of reciprocating metal parts set in a black metal casing the size of a small barrel. As he sat back, trying to work out how to remove it, he heard the hum of the rotor. The air-floater shot up and turned away.
'Keep down!' hissed Yggur from above. 'If they see us, they'll hang around until we come out.'
'Who?' said Nish, who couldn't see very far from his vantage point.
'The scavengers.'
Fifty
Lying still, Nish felt the ground shake in that familiar thump-thump. A clanker went slowly by, greatly modified from its original purpose. The shooter's platform had been enclosed with pieces of metal in all shapes and sizes, and then roofed over with leaves of cast-iron armour from wrecked clankers. The roof bristled with metal spikes and the machine had a javelard at front and rear. Everything was rusted, makeshift and appallingly ugly.
Metal screeched and squealed as it shuddered to a stop. Three men leapt out, wild-haired, dirty creatures dressed in rags and pieces of armour. All were armed with swords and knives, and two had crossbows strapped to their backs.
One bent down, pointing. 'They've found our heel marks,' Yggur said quietly. 'Now they'll follow our tracks, coming this way but not going back.'
'Better hope we didn't leave tracks all the way,' said Nish.
The scavengers prowled around the curve of the barrier for the best part of an hour before returning to their machine and thumping off.
'Get working, Nish,' Yggur called. 'You too, Irisis. I'll keep lookout. I don't think they've gone very far.'
When the sun was as high as it was going to get, Irisis slid down the curved side of the construct. Yggur passed a sack to her, which she placed carefully on the ground in the shade, and sat beside it.
'What's that?' said Nish.
'All the controller workings.' Irisis picked at a broken fingernail.
Do you know how to use them?'
They've been disabled, but I expect we can work it out, said Yggur. 'How are you going, Nish?'
'I've freed the driving mechanism,' he replied, "but it's too heavy to lift by myself. Even with three of us, I don't see how we're going to carry it to the other side of the harrier.'
'Let's get it out first.' Yggur moved under the construct, which was tilted at an angle, having come down onto a boulder when the field failed. He began to pull. 'Irisis, get that stick over there. Put it underneath the mechanism and, as we pull it free, let it slide gently to the ground.'
They did that, accompanied by much grunting and heaving, not to mention the near loss of Nish's toes when the mechanism slipped at the last moment; but finally it lay on the stony soil, undamaged.
'Wait here,' said Yggur, heading for the invisible barrier a few hundred paces distant. He passed through, looking up for signs of the air-floater, and disappeared among the sparse shrubbery.
Several minutes went by. 'I hope it hasn't gone too far,' said Nish.
'Or worse,' Irisis replied darkly.
Thump-thump.
'The scavengers are coming back,' she added.
'Afraid so.'
'What are we going to do?'
'Haven't a clue.'
Neither spoke for several minutes. The clanker contraption reappeared, tracking along the outside of the barrier. The same three men got out.
'I've just had an uncomfortable thought,' said Nish.
'What's that?'
'This protection keeps out living things, but the wind blows straight through it.'
'I'm not sure what you're saying,' said Irisis.
'What if they can fire their weapons through?'
A big, hairy man climbed on top, peering in their direction with a rusty spyglass. The pair on the ground squatted down.
'We're in trouble,' said Nish. 'Don't move. 'You're the one who's breathing so loudly,' Irisis retorted with her famous calm.
'I hope Yggur sealed the protection when he went out.'
The spyglass tracked across to where they huddled in the shadow under the construct, passed on, then came back. The hairy man shouted instructions, though Nish could not distinguish them.
Shortly a woman emerged from the rear hatch of the clanker, pulling a child by the arm. The child, a girl of ten or twelve with tangled black hair, resisted. The man roared at the woman, pointing at the tilted construct. The woman screeched back, clipped the struggling girl over the ear and dragged her to the barrier by her hair.
The girl shook the woman off, turned towards the hairy man, who was still roaring, and gave him a two-fingered sign. She poked her tongue out at the woman and received another clip over the ear.
Pressing her grubby hands to the barrier, she stared through it. As her gaze passed across him, again the soles of Nish's feet tingled.
'That's done it,' said Irisis. 'She must have a native seeker's talent.'
'Doesn't explain how she found me,' said Nish. 'Since, as you frequently point out, I've got no talent at all.'
'You make up for it in other ways, Nish.'
The girl pointed at them, shouting excitedly.
'Look out!' cried Irisis as the hairy man swung his javelard in their direction.
No time to run. All Nish could do was flatten himself against the ground and pray that he made an indistinct target. The spear slammed into the base of the construct next to him. Irisis cried out.
'Are you all right?' said Nish.
'Just dirt in my eye. Run! Next time he'll put it right through one of us.'
They scrambled out, clawing their way around the other side, where he would not be able to see them. Another missile whizzed by Nish's backside as he went.
'He's bloody fast to reload,' Nish said, panting.
'Now what do we do?'
'Wait for them to go away?'
'Have you got any water?'
'No. Have you?'
'No. It could be a thirsty wait.'
'At least the company's good' said Nish.
'I've been wondering when you'd notice,' she said, pretending to be piqued.
'You know what I'm like—'
'Slow!'
'I have to work things out in my own way and my own time.'
'But I don't. Come here.' She put her arms around him. 'I've missed you so badly, Nish.'
And I you — you're my dearest friend.' After a long moment he pulled away. 'Sorry — it's too hot.'
She sighed.
'Yggur will do something,' Irisis said a good while later.
'If they haven't got the air-floater already. There were three clankers, remember?'
'That's comforting.'
'Glad to be of assistance,' he grunted.